Peter Obi Offers African Countries Tips On How To Survive Trump’s Sweeping Tariffs

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The presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 general elections, Peter Obi, has offered African countries tips on how to stay afloat the murky water of trade tariffs recently triggered by President Donald Trump of the United States of America.

Obi gave the suggestions on Tuesday in London while speaking on the topic “Africa Role in the New Global Economy”, at the Plenary of the Commonwealth Enterprise and Investment Council (CWEIC) Trade and Investment Summit of 2025.

The former governor of Anambra State urged leaders on the continent to invest in their youthful human capital, which represents over a billion workforce, according to a statement by the spokesperson of the Peter Obi Media Reach (POMR), Mr. Ibrahim Umar.

Obi proposed that the key to achieving this was to strengthen the skills of the workforce for both domestic use and global export.

Obi, who spoke elaborately, stated, “The discussion on Africa’s Role in the New Global Economy is a topic of immense importance considering the opportunities and endless potentials within the vast continent of Africa, which, when fully harnessed, promises a great positive impact, not just within the Commonwealth economy but globally.

“The recent interventions of President Trump have disrupted some of the settled assumptions of the global economy, which has seen many countries now taking proactive and active responses to secure their economies, while the same is presently not happening in Africa.

“Despite its vast opportunities, Africa’s share of global trade, according to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), stands at 2-3%. Our share of the global GDP stands at about 3%. Africa’s GDP per capita is even worse at $1900 when compared to the continent in ranking—Asia, where the GDP per capita is around $9000.

“Africa’s global trade and GDP have been stagnant for more than two decades in contrast to Africa being the second largest and most populous continent with a population of about 1.5 billion people.

“Africa is home to the most youthful and dynamic workforce, with the largest concentration of the working-age population of about 1 billion people.

“Africa has an abundance of natural resources, ranging from minerals to nearly a billion hectares of arable, uncultivated land. Africa holds over 60% of the world’s arable land. Approximately 30 per cent of the world’s mineral resources are found in Africa.

“While Africa did not witness a similar economic transformation under globalisation 2.0, we need to rise up and take the right actions to ensure that we can profit from whatever trading system will arise in the wake of the second Trump Presidency. This, Africa can achieve by simply investing in its potential – the youthful human capital of over a billion workforce it has to create the needed skilled workforce and productivity both for Africa’s and global development.

“Africa’s food and agriculture market is projected to increase from its present amount of about US$280 billion a year to over US$1 trillion a year by 2030. This shows that with agriculture at the core of Africa’s economic transformation, the continent has the potential to become a global agricultural powerhouse and a net exporter of food, contributing immeasurably to the new global economy.

“What is missing is the leadership that can reorder priorities and scale up productivity so that African countries can enter higher grade value creation. We have seen evidence of the possibility of higher-grade value creation in some of the better-governed African countries. The challenge is scaling up and sustaining innovative production in the region. We need to produce more goods and services that the world needs and be smart to leverage whatever global trade arrangement survives Mr Trump’s disruption.

“This is a junction for transformative change in Africa. This period requires new thinking about leadership. It requires refocusing on productivity. Africa pursued economic convergence in the previous era by importing political and economic institutions of Western developed economics without focusing on productivity and human capital development like the developmental state of Asia.

‘This is the time to rebuild African economies through new leadership that focuses on rapid upgrades in productive capacities, especially innovative education and healthcare and pulling Africans out of poverty.”

The New Diplomat
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